Thursday,April 1, 10:00 – 11:00am EST
https://nyu.zoom.us/j/99255682170
The transdisciplinary space of STEAM has potential to break down disciplinary boundaries to create room for underserved learners to participate in new ways of learning and knowing. In this talk, I will think across two research projects to draw connections between designing equitable STEAM learning experiences as well as the environments and communities surrounding those experiences. In one project, I argue that there is unique promise in the craft of weaving for supporting broader ways to engage in mathematics. I conducted semi-structured interviews with adult weavers and an intervention designed to expose middle-school youth to the mathematical practices inherent in weaving.
I found that understanding math engagement in broader ways makes it possible to better recognize and value youths’ intellectual work. These findings raise additional questions about how educators can design communities around STEAM environments to better support and uplift learners who are traditionally oppressed in these spaces. As part of a large, cross-institutional project, the second study examines an out-of-school STEAM program designed to support STEAM participation and identity in 4th-8th grade girls of color. We argue that designing counterspaces for Black and Latina girls in STEAM lays groundwork for supportive community where learning and engagement can persist, even through a global crisis. Together, these lines of work suggest that STEAM learning and the spaces that surround it can create opportunities for imagining new pathways and thriving in learning environments.
2021 Trouble with STEAM.pdf
Thompson 2020 ISLS Math Instantiations Poster.pdf
Naomi Thompson, PhD; Postdoctoral Scholar, School of Education and Social Policy, Northwestern University
Naomi Thompson (she/her) is a Postdoctoral Scholar in the School of Education and Social Policy at Northwestern University. She earned her PhD in Learning Sciences from Indiana University. Dr. Thompson currently works on the Digital Youth Divas Project team. She is interested in the ways crafting, art-making, and other design activities can intersect with and enhance equitable learning in both formal and informal environments. Particularly, she seeks to design educational experiences in ways that highlight and honor voices and practices that are traditionally minoritized, underserved, and undervalued in educational settings. More information can be found at www.naomi-thompson.com